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Perception of spatial orientation in spasmodic torticollis part I: The postural vertical

✍ Scribed by Dr. D. Anastasopoulos; K. Bhatia; A. Bisdorff; A. M. Bronstein; M. A. Gresty; C. D. Marsden


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
579 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-3185

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Estimates of points of entering and exiting from upright posture were obtained from 25 seated, restrained patients with idiopathic spasmodic torticollis (ST) and matched normal subjects exposed to cycles of 1.5°/s tilts in a flight simulator. Estimates were obtained for displacements in roll and pitch about upright and for yaw tilts about a rostrocaudal, “barbecue,” axis with the subjects supinated. For both pitch and roll, normal subjects estimated entering upright when they were still ∼1° from machine upright and perceived themselves to be upright through a mean arc of 6°. In barbecue tilt, entering upright was estimated at 0.2° for an arc of 6°. Patients estimated entering upright at 2.8° in roll and 3° in pitch but estimated exiting upright at the same tilt as normal subjects; that is, they were less specific in detecting verticality. Patients were normal in barbecue tilt. No relationship between tilt estimates and head deviation was found. There were no differences between normal subjects when tested with their head in normal posture and with an assumed tilt of 20°. Normal subjects probably based their estimates on combined vestibularsomatosensory signals, whereas torticollis patients appeared to derive more from a vestibular signal. However, patients referred the vestibular signals to the trunk long axis when asked to indicate the whole‐body vertical. The findings suggest disruption of the normal combined vestibuloproprioceptive mechanism for detecting body uprightness in ST.


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Perception of spatial orientation in spa
✍ Dr. D. Anastasopoulos; K. Bhatia; A. M. Bronstein; C. D. Marsden; M. A. Gresty 📂 Article 📅 1997 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 663 KB

## Abstract Twenty‐nine patients with idiopathic spasmodic torticollis (ST) and matched normal control subjects were asked to align a target line to perceived earth vertical [visual vertical (VV)]. Settings were made against a whole‐field random‐dot background that was either stationary or rotating